Received a property dispute notice? Our AI analyzes the notice, identifies your strongest defenses under the Transfer of Property Act and Specific Relief Act, and drafts a comprehensive reply in under 60 seconds.
A property dispute legal notice is a formal communication sent by one party to another to assert a claim over immovable property — seeking vacation, compensation, cessation of encroachment, or initiation of negotiation before filing a court case. It is a mandatory precursor to many property suits under Indian law.
Neighbour encroaches on your land. Dispute over where one property ends and another begins. Unauthorized construction on boundary walls.
Multiple parties claim ownership of the same property. Disputed inheritance, forged documents, or adverse possession claims.
Eviction notices under Rent Control Acts, disputes over rent enhancement, subletting without permission, or repair obligations.
Disputes over right of passage, light and air, water drainage — governed by the Indian Easements Act 1882.
Seller refuses to execute sale deed after advance payment. Buyer fails to pay balance. Dispute over possession or title at registration.
Developer delays possession, changes specifications, or fails to register flat. RERA complaints now available for registered projects.
The right defense depends on the specific type of dispute. Our AI identifies which defenses apply based on your notice facts.
The notice sender's cause of action is time-barred under the Limitation Act. Suit cannot be filed after 12 years (possession) or 3 years (specific performance).
You have been in open, continuous, uninterrupted, hostile possession for 12+ years. You may have acquired title by adverse possession — bars the sender's suit.
Your title is clear, registered, and superior to the notice sender's claim. The sender lacks standing (locus standi) to challenge your ownership.
The same dispute was already decided by a court in your favour. The sender cannot re-litigate the same issue (res judicata under CPC S.11).
The notice fails to disclose a valid legal cause of action — it is vague, legally unsustainable, or based on incorrect legal premises.
In sale agreement disputes: the sender has no privity with you. The notice is sent by someone who was not a party to the original agreement.
The sender knowingly allowed you to build, invest, and occupy for years — they are estopped from now asserting their claim after you relied on their inaction.
Survey settlement records, mutation entries, patta/katha records confirm your ownership or possession. The sender's claim contradicts official records.
What exactly is the sender claiming? Ownership? Boundary encroachment? Right of way? Specific performance? The response strategy depends entirely on the nature of the claim.
Title deed/sale deed (registered), EC (encumbrance certificate), property tax receipts, mutation records, patta, survey sketch, bank loan documents, builder's allotment letter (if flat).
Is the sender's claim time-barred? Calculate when their cause of action arose and compare against the Limitation Act periods. A time-barred claim is a complete defense.
The reply must: deny the false allegations specifically, assert your legal right, cite applicable sections of TPA/SRA/Limitation Act, and make it clear that you will defend any suit. Do not make any admissions in the reply.
Send the reply via Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due. Keep copies of the reply + postal receipt + AD card. This creates a legal record of your response.
If you fear the sender will cause immediate damage (demolish a wall, forcibly occupy), file an urgent temporary injunction under Order 39 CPC. Courts act within 24-48 hours in urgent cases.
Legal Notice AI analyzes your property dispute notice and generates a comprehensive reply citing Transfer of Property Act, Specific Relief Act, Limitation Act, and relevant case law — ready for your advocate to review and sign.
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